Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 1 Aug 1935, p. 8

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F:w es # 1y #* Lk 69 a0e l e nz aiicciiirnt ioi â€" : qpt en emern I ae TELEPHONES : ’.â€",:a','c';; we:. ; 1 > _ 4 N. Ist (Over Walgreen‘s) © Highland Park, 111 WEARING APPAREL t mncofiam-n:.-hm-g &u:hmm-um POUR COUPLES :.Ou)lu\ whtprrast 9 General .._.__ YOUNG ‘LADY" to sell for lo-lth-hfl +« concern; must “v: ;“to‘o:.} e .hl.' & . I i Smail salary | n-l-u"m John Wolch‘:ppo it, who was recently ‘appointed to sutcedd .F.; H. Meyer, 2. filling the posi ~very efficiently. $ ° 1‘ «74 §39% Central Ave.. Tel. H. P. 3036. gan Road. Other occupants of the Moeller building are Hea ‘s Resâ€" taurant; Vant. and | Selig, ‘realtors, Tanelien Shoe| Repair Shop, and the Wardrobe Cleaners. F13d o ers worth four times their price. Econoâ€" my section, Miller Fur Co., 166 N. Michâ€" The Deerfleld Post Office will be moved from its present location in the Zeiss building on d Aveâ€" nue, about September 20, to the Moeller building on North Waukeâ€" igun Ave., Chicago. Open evenings. Deerfield P. O. To Wadals iss s muP CaZ joue vies $ bedroom brick house; #% bathw; private read : umu&mt‘mw lmdlm H. P. l‘ll‘.“c.rh-h‘ 1736 Burton avenue Arotf Aiinng e esb hig st 9 Aidcbably go o+ oc 54 i;.gfl‘m;h:hnl;nlflm It was regorted complaints and critici are continually being received, not ‘only from resi of the â€" village (but al ’ifmz their friends and @ven str ‘s outside, of the untidy and. li ~condition of â€" the bts, along the curbs around the business f&ur, corners. It seemed to be the general opinion of the membérs that a matter reâ€" quiring so li ‘e'exp'cnlit:nfl having so much, p criticism could© be financed from the vehic ‘:rfmd to the extent of havi Jitter cleaned up at least twice a week. Secretary Ray Meyer w mtme& ed by resolution to again . this matter to the attention of the Vilâ€" lage Council. F P ol fo 541 Central Ave. (Tel. H. P. 641. HIGHLAND RADIO SERVICE RADIO SALES AND SERVICE Mr. â€"Miltgn A. Frantz| as the Chamber‘s m& ber ‘for the Cen celebration : rted that there hgd been some funds reâ€" maining . that donated by the public spirited vitizens for purâ€" pose of ~f ng the ration and that ‘was to be tui over to the for tbén 'm of buying equipment for the athletic grounds noyw â€"under .ie(mg:\ution. the reported | that the money had yet | received but on the apsurance of Mr, Frantz that it would ‘be forthâ€"coming an appropriation of $80 y set ‘aside to be used for the,;;;up speciâ€" fied. } 11â€" ud i Read the Want : The reguldr. monthly, : and lun¢theon of | the Seld of :Commeé was ursday evening, the 25th / at : ‘s Restaurant _ with ~fairly atâ€" tendance, Dr. C. R. Sy presidâ€" Deerfieldl(‘i. of C.:.: } . : Wants Clean Streets CeNTRAL BMPLOYMENT AGENCY PAGE nc?t Mother‘s Hel for an Adtaker Phone 5 5 5 Senl, $50; Genuine Mink, §150; othâ€" Help Wanted COPFFEE CAKES MADE . intelligence ; Sand Spring» :z\h.‘::r'- l’z‘xflt reds ; : $90 un Write or sall at 1688 For Sale Change Location mageone [s1 . _$10â€"$156 Ads _ CLA e sgy . NOWICE â€" Advertisements received after 3 o‘clock Wednesday, RATES: 50 cents for five lines or lezs if paid on or before insertion; 75 cents if 10 cents for each additional line. $1.10 for 3 consecutive weeks. BLIND ADS: 75 « sertion ; $1.00 if not paid by Saturday following publication. 10 cents each addition OPFFICEâ€"Up to date in on reasonable terms. STATE BANK [ CLOCK EXPERT, chime, hall, a P es es agn m og, free estimate. â€" David Johansson.. ol i +R00M UNFURN AP. 23 THREER ROOM AP. T and tile bath in oys Arrercneannnies can h ( 507 Eim Place. " i P B O ®antt # SLEEPING ROOMS with |.SERVICE STATION mNng | m'm. H. P. 5556| | _: Corner Elni Place and ‘Bt. © A2241 MIDGET GAS ENGINE, $10 elecâ€" tric sewing MNM.'mfi m:loetrb motor, $10 ; 16â€"inch lawn , $4; elec« tric ice box unit. â€" Tel. . 1376 after Apartments for Rent The members of the Missionary S¢â€" ciety of the First Uni Evangelâ€" ical Church will hold their month meeting on the lake front on Thurs day, Aug. 8, at 3:30 pim. At 6: o‘clock the usual pot (Iuck suppe will be served to which other mem bers of the families‘ are asked attened. â€" + _ Funeral services ‘held Tuesâ€" day, July 30, at the Highland Park Presbyterian Church with the Rev. Louis W. Sherwin conducting services. Interment in Ridgeâ€" land Cemetery, > fra He is survived by h four daughters, Mrs. pfnnmpbnfipnm' Iiiipping se Mildred Musselman 0: Charlotta; and two Deerfield, and Arthur ton, Long Island. i . Adolf Goelitz, foundér of the Goeâ€" litz Candy Company, for many years a resident of inia, died at his home in Bannockburn Saturday, July 27, at 7 p.m. of a \heart attack. At the time of his death, Mr. Goelâ€" itz was 65 years old and had lived for the‘ past ten years in Bannockâ€" burn, . uo ores PR . ~ Frowbly P dbas #000â€" 20 a 2 ECE RVCs U0 .. 860 R. W lepp reues $60 io. Central aye. Incutre Tel. H. P. 49 Adolf Goelitz Died . . Saturday, July 27 good condition, will sell r K. F Kelley, 27 N. Sheridan # ‘Tel. n.‘i $ rooms, 8‘!4 baths, sun iporch, large 'H:cboz?. Anianca pouu Fetivicg > hlm ; wonderful near lower moehool and park ; to '-oklhnd- i ~‘BAIRD & wa ‘no." : * Mr. Remington, Tel H. P/ 1855.. A2tf Life insurance companies put $3,â€" 101,525,930 into circulation in the United States and Canada in 1984, or more than 8 on dollars a day. ‘ Payments® for t state in 1934 were $213,000,000." 2C 4 Beautifully wooded lot in (fine residential section, 4 blocks from ter . of town ; $6000 value, will sell for |$8500, cash or easy payments; act ‘Address Box J J Press office. til A22â€"24 ‘EASIER TO BUY A CAR! DELâ€"MAR WOODS lots. $500 ; $4.00 down, and $2 per week, a profitable investment; title in Hi Park State Bank; you can buy on tract at these terms. and save your h : toward the I. Higniong P NHMAns Tel. Highland Park 2360. Total payments to |policy holders and beneficiaries of Hij d Park were $276,000, as reported in the life payments number of the Naâ€" tional Underwriter, Arthur F. Hall, president of the Lingoin National, said. . This amount included death claims and accidental death benéfits paid to beneficiaries,| and matured endowments, â€" annuities, â€" disability claims, and ‘cash paid ‘directly to living policy owners ih this city, Life insurance companies put $3,â€" 101,525,930 into circulation in the .\ \Residents of Highland Park ‘reâ€" ceived life insurance payments in 1934 amounting to $92,96 per. capiâ€" ta, acéording to an | te made by the Lincoln Nationial Life Insurâ€" ance Company, Fort. Wayne, Ind. $22.96 Per Capita of : _ Insurance Money for { Highland Park Clock Repairing Offices for Rent sesm BRLLEC JOHN OSTROW 2848 West Park A (800 Yucen Lilies BUY OF 124 8. ELM PLAC LOOK 80 OFFICE 8A k 2360. $ 80 | _lot : im from ter sell for |$850 t *A + is, sun hed ping pon wife Anna, liva McGann 4. Ann Rusâ€" slands; Mrs. New York; 8, Walter of of Douglasâ€" SSIFIED WANTâ€"ADS p apartment ; AlTâ€"8% PLEASANT ROOM; cool; board of deâ€" aired ; 1% blocks to transportation ; reas. o idle it ns Lo sn ROOM IN MODERN HOUSE, do:I: reasonable. ‘Tel. H.1 BABY‘S HIGH CHAIR WANTED ; must PAINTING, PAPERHANGING and DECORâ€" Rev, F. G. Piepenbrok of St. Paul‘s Church in the pulpit. d Sunday, Aug. fi. the service will be held in the Présbyterian Church, with Rev, Earl J. Bruso of the Bethichem Church in the pulpit. S?ndl{, Sept. 1, the final service will‘ be held in St. Paul‘s Evangeliâ€" cal Church with Dr. W. F. Weir of the | Deerfield | Presbyterian Church in the pulpit. . €20. 40 .. CA Church, | / Rev, F. G Church in \ ‘series of three union" services wlfl be held at the Protestant ch es of Deerfield three succes. sive‘ Sunday mornings beginning August 18 and concluding on Se r 1. ‘Each minister will arrange for the special music the day he is in the pulpit. Wy. inday, Aug., 18, the service will be jin the Bethichem . Evangelical Church, Rosemary Terrace, with Tel. H. P. 1212 scresned porch; oll heat; 1 block to lnke ; elose to school transportation ; near mw-:i_:-m grounds in Ra«â€" Deerfield Churches : : <â€"_â€"<.Plan Union Services winia Woods ; lot T5x200, Tel H. GARAGE SPACE Saug e oo fromm business center ; million National , $2,857 â€" million State); amount of deposits unpaid on Dec. 31, 1934, $2,896 million (tfiu million National, $1,522 milâ€" lion State.) P The survey of receivership was de with the coâ€"operation of the state. banking ‘commissioners thruâ€" out the country and the office of the Coniptroller of the Currency. Briefâ€" ly summarized, it was as follows: Banks in receivership on Dec. 31, 1934, 6:352 (1,551 National, 4,801 State); aggregate deposits at date of closing, $4,739 million ($1,882 million (National , $2,857 â€" million State); amount of deposits unpaid in good .condition and reasonable. _ ‘Tel. 7. P41 bie, _ ‘Tel : Included in the figures are nine closed insured banks, all of which suspended during the last‘ s z@:thd of 1934;. <Records of the F. D. I. C,. show that practically: eve depositor of these banks had r¢ yed full paynient of his claim by scember 31. $ + # B80 Central Ave. Tel. H. P. 5557 | HB5L ‘Tel. H. P. 760. Amé; es o en eey mm mmVV! _ !.._. JOHN CHRISTENSEN Total deposits tied up with the dure: 9{ 6,852 ‘banks for which figâ€" ures were available were more than ! billion dollars, of which fiftyâ€"one cent was still not realized to deâ€" »gkitors at the ‘yearâ€"end. Almost all > banks had been closed for At 4 t a year, many of them for much longer periods, the report revealed. Situation Wanted Washington, D. C,.â€" More than the deposits in six thousand ks in receivership in the United tes remained unpaid: on Decemâ€" r 81, 1934, it is disclosed by the ederal Reposit Insurance Corpork&â€" in as the result of a recently comâ€" eted survey: of bank liquidationk. . Liquidated Dec. 31 Houses for Rent Rooms for Rent Wanted to Buy Work Guarani Accurate. Prompt Service. gdl write. * _ ~ALBERT H. SALLEE Miscellaneous with us NOW. _‘ _ & ANSPACKHK C _._!!‘ Oldln.l Ave. H.P. 1046. P22â€"24 H18â€"22pd THE PRES S PlTHt P1O 'mfl""‘whhnu Tok tor Tine and pertorning ‘all work in accordance M""::: “"“’"Mhm-uam. 1101 Buens Avenue, Chicago, Hlinois. .mavmu on any or all '“'?:) Grading :...n_ !. (b) |Pavements. & ;.P!'P#h!fll be \re Dated at Highland this 20th day of J Highland (Park hald Fond auren PAâ€"2. applied to ‘uum‘mb,mm 225 euble yards fine roofâ€" '"zg(“*-u)bum“ the job as directed by tha Etraat Pracs.ill.la the job as directed by the Street Department. ~â€" The resetves the right :g,,_-d&u-u-&"n'u"‘“:. a&ofifih‘MCfi‘fivd Sealed will be received by the Council iiines fl:‘i'-l- t;-m@q Hall, ;!!d‘l’ud Park, ‘the. 19th (day, of August, 1935 “{“'uw"* mnishing of the following materials for the Contral Avente to Resewess Resinh® * ven i3 _ Approximately £000 gallons Asphalt to tion; {5 cents if not paid by Saturday following publication. BLIN’D A.DSi75 cents for five lines or less if paid for before inâ€" HIGH SCHOOL District No.‘118, Wighland UNDâ€"â€"Dog, biack . daschund, Wednesday Nm.'::‘mh;m“-:“hnm for thik ad. | paying The government report shows a rather wide range of rates in this state. The range of bills for 25 kiloâ€" watt !l!r‘nra is from $1.50 /to $2.18 with: Park at. 1.70, for: 100 kilo&b hours from $3.81 to $5.60, Public Service Company being $4.68, and for 250 kilowatt hours, the rangé [is from $6.81 to $10.63, local users paying gz‘f Commenting on these &enn the Federal Powâ€" er Commission release states "Availâ€" ability of fuel resources and accesâ€" sib of water power far, in some. nces, to exp! differâ€" ences in rate levels, Geographic and economic conditions have a marked influence, as ‘do the varying tax policies of the several states and communities. | Density <~of populaâ€" tion, season requirements, presence or absence of larger industries, varâ€" iations in purchasing power of the people, and even climatic eonditions may give rise to rate differences not otherwise explainable. Over such variables the utility companies may have‘!i;ie or no control." ; The | report further designates whether the electrical energy to a city is supplied by an independent company, controlled by a holding company or by a municipal plant. Only six companies in the Tllinois report ‘were shown as ‘being indeâ€" : In the population grouping of 10,â€" 0600 to 25,000, in which Highland ‘Park is included, the government reâ€" port lists 34 Ilinois cities. For a eontutup&on of 25 kilowatt ‘hours per. , Public Service Company bills are ranked third lowest in the state. For 100 kilowatt hours, local utu'f fourth lowest and for 250 kilowstt hour| eustomers, local rates are the second lowest. ‘This tabulaâ€" tion shows that of the 34 . Illinois cities within the 10,000 to 25,000 popylation range, only one offers a lower rate for 25, 100 and 250 kiloâ€" watt i:ouu consumption than local residents pay. ' . Regidential users ‘of electricity in ind Park pay the Public Servâ€" ice Company of N,ord\er“: lilinois a rate that il‘éomido?nblyflower than that rged by other Illinois comâ€" pani urva towns of gimilar size t to a report just released by the electric rate survey division of the Federal Power Commission. The Illlinois report, one of a series covering every state in the union, ‘hq’wzcuxtomcn' bills from low to high for groups of cities of different population classifications. ; (e) ‘Concrete walk, curb and Hi‘g?ilandil’ark Has ; ~â€" Low Electric Rate Lost and Found Legal Notices , August 14, 1985, and will then ublicly, read and tabulated 1 "To the Soard aht io the Poofe LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE line. noon, . Daylight City Clerk. ‘ I S T ,"_*-“‘ A i 548 Eim Pinee h:l- Â¥o. X. P. #74 618 Him Place X22â€"28 5â€"6 Each contractor shall ‘ong . only one certified check, payable of Fducation, Deerficldâ€"Shiclds n High School, District No, 118; in of ten per cent (10%) of the ‘of bid. The Board reserves the to reject and or all bids. | \ IF mand specifications may be ex S e se © Raater won whith uto thhen Teomn hs t xz Bimonds, West & Blair and such ¢ tions will become the propertg: r‘.: te) â€" Underground spri e m‘r-l-n‘mg ¢ Public Works ~Administration | will buly on this project. Anhul-n-t. careâ€" fully Bulletin Na,tdh revised :of.llarel 6, 1985, Heularly relative to be paid shall be not less the ‘...'.. &‘:) per hour f:‘ i abor .?‘.l }:: wg_h::l'qr skilled Iabor. | * / Reem 305 _ North T n-n-z'g""'"" # North Sheridean Road _ Wishlans Pâ€"4 .. _ MOTOR CAR ELECTRIC SERVICE ‘An earlier usmti" by the Federal Power Commission which presented rates for all} the larger cities throughout the country shows that the rates applying in Highland Park are even lower than those charged in some of the lgrgest cities of the United States.. For instance local residential paly less than customers of the P type in New York City, St. Paul, "Holedo, Salt Aute Redy and Penbios _ *hhhdm lte Company is oneâ€"6f that number, Claims ‘of municipal: 6ownership adâ€" vocates that city bwsership and operation of electricit) pfi)ylk!::lm jlower rates are definitely gpiked by the report which ows that the only municipal plant : the 10,â€" not have lower rates than ‘ Public Service Company. ; || | _ Professional and Business DR. B. A. HAMILTON (d) : Drainage system ILLINOIS STATE FAR Governor Horner (Signed) ~LILLIAN C. TUCKER, Springfield, Aug. 17 to 24 ALL VETERANS! DAY, _ _ _ SUNDaAY, AUG 1s . _ ~ GOVERNOR‘s DAY, }\ THURSDAY, AVUG 2 | _ Cp 7 C @RAND CIRCUIT AUVC. 1 TO 23, ALL VETERANS! SUNDAY, AUG Anu|§5|on -onflrf'" i The Nation‘s Greatest Agricultural Fair AAA. AUTO RACES, ° SATURDAY, AUG. 24 Phone H. P. 1091 CIRCUIT 9 TO 23, 589 Tel H. P.iD5 â€" 35 S. 8t JohwA® tns B Pr tax. (Whrthe had £80ih gla P% fl wrindat| 9t . On ' esday, ::;a from M;-"‘;: are e of the of WHikley Field, the J. SMITEH P] DELIGIOUS CREAK i"‘f round L ;i-* a T .‘ for an Adtaker TRURKDAY avo -“" m 410 o AIRY || |Faste 3}; Vitamin D â€" fee if \E. NELSON & w BP A it vites You 44 the bl‘.lt:'n.. k wishin. Inygroung Sit 0k 5 [ ygrounds ., fi:-..li a limited TR i transvor i’wm o 4 Wt 4h€ Ti one & TAILOR x nsl t to 3U8P q .

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